eLife Innovation Sprint 2020: Accepted projects

We invite everyone passionate about transforming research communication and culture to join these 15 project teams in September.
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The eLife Innovation Sprint is a two-day collaborative event where we bring together 70 developers, designers, data scientists, researchers, product technologists, communication specialists and more to develop prototypes to change the ways we share and do research. This year's Sprint will take place September 2–3, online.

During our call for project proposals, we received 29 submissions from all around the world. We are happy to announce that we have selected these 15 projects to be worked on at the Sprint.

More detailed aims, plans for Sprint work and types of contributors for each project are available on our website. We invite everyone interested in contributing to these projects and passionate about open science and research culture to apply to participate in the Sprint, by June 7.

  1. Visit the Sprint website to find out more and apply

Data paper skeleton tools for life sciences

Led by Yo Yehudi, Lilly Winfree and Phillippe Rocca-Serra

We would like to take the pain out of beginning to write papers, making it easy to automatically generate the parts of a paper that can be easily scaffolded and incentivising reproducible papers by ensuring the scaffolds include well-structured data and metadata.

Covidpreprints.com

Led by Jonny Coates, Zhang-He Goh and Gautam Dey

We aim to enable wider access and understanding by directly addressing issues with the discovery of reliable science and associated reviews or summaries. By placing the science in the context of pandemic progression, we aim to help readers understand the role of open science in solving global problems.

The Invisible Wall/The Clean Slate

Led by Renuka Kudva, Nafisa M. Jadavji and Gabriela Gaona

We envision a mutual support-driven platform for early-career researchers by early-career researchers. We believe it is time to have open conversations about bullying and harassment in academia, and that this will lead us towards a systemic change in the long term.

Expanding Open Grants

Led by Hao Ye

Demystify and democratise academic research and the “hidden curriculum” with an open repository of grant proposals, fellowship applications, and job statements.

A badge for FAIR software

Led by Mateusz Kuzak, Carlos Martinez Ortiz and Jurriaan Spaaks

We want to incentivise research software engineers and researchers who develop software to implement the simple recommendations for making software more FAIR, by making their effort and compliance more visible to the rest of the word.

Research References Tracking Tool (R2T2)

Led by Diego Alonso Álvarez, Valentin Sulzer and Jez Cope

We envision a tool to improve citations from software that can be incorporated into other software to record the references used, wherein the code information from those references was applied.

Share your insight, inspire the next step

Led by Michiel van der Vaart and Jan Paul Grollé

We want to provide researchers with an intuitive tool to concisely formulate why a publication is interesting, who it is interesting for, and what the next step should be.

Participants working at the eLife Sprint 2019. Photo credit: Jess Brittain Photography. Source.

Crawling data portals for improving research communication

Led by Andreiwid Correa and Kellyton Brito

It remains difficult for consumers of open data to discover, select and compare open-data repositories and platforms. A solution to collate and display this information will provide valuable data for benchmarking exercises, and ultimately help inform consumers.

PhraseScope

Led by Alexander Powell

Current content discovery mechanisms are based on indexing services that users have a stake in but little influence over. PhraseScope will provide an intuitive discovery tool for identifying content items related to whatever research content the user happens to be viewing currently, whilst placing indexing in the hands of the user community.

The Software Citation Project

Led by Sarthak Sehgal

As a research software engineer, I would like to develop open software that can be cited just like research papers. I would like to submit a software citation to a publication using existing open software tools, in order to make my software citable and trackable to funders and reusable by other researchers.

Annotate them all

Led by Tiago Lubiana

Teaching computers how to read articles can bridge the publication-to-knowledge gap, accelerate scientific discovery and save us time to focus on improving research culture.

Digest-preprints

Led by Shyam Saladi

We need a continuous integration (CI) for papers. A CI infrastructure would allow for easy, community-driven development of programmatic checks and would allow decoupling efforts at UIs for authors/reviewers to understand issues detected.

Affordabee: Low-Cost Open-Access Publishing

Led by Caleb Kibet, Kennedy Mwangi and Jennifer Mutisya

We envision a platform that can help students and early-career researchers identify journals that can offer waivers or subsidies, and how to access them. We seek a platform that will reduce the APC cost barrier for students from resource-poor settings.

SciGen.Report

Led by Cassio Amorim

I hope to create a website that allows users to easily share and view any information they and the community have on the reproducibility of papers.

Code is Science

Led by João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette, Isaac Miti and Yo Yehudi

Whilst it is generally agreed that scientific research needs to be peer-reviewed as part of the publication, this stipulation doesn’t always extend to peer-reviewing code. We aim to build infrastructure that clearly lists not only journal policies with regards to code artefacts, but also compliance with journal policy.

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